A General Saluted the Daughter Her Father Called Just a Nurse-Quieen - Chainityai

A General Saluted the Daughter Her Father Called Just a Nurse-Quieen

By the time I pulled into the circular driveway at Briarwood Country Club outside Columbus, Ohio, the July heat had already turned the back of my blouse damp.

The leather steering wheel burned lightly under my palms.

Cicadas screamed from the trees along the edge of the parking lot.

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My father’s silver Cadillac sat crooked across two parking spaces near the entrance, angled like the painted lines were merely suggestions.

Of course it did.

Gordon Whitmore had never believed the rules applied to him.

He believed rules were for people who waited in line, people who read the fine print, people who did not know which board member to call when things got inconvenient.

I sat in my car for a moment longer than necessary and watched a valet pretend not to notice the Cadillac.

Then I checked myself in the rearview mirror.

Navy blazer.

Cream silk blouse.

Hair twisted neatly at the nape of my neck.

Small pearl earrings my mother once told me were too plain for a formal event.

And on my left lapel, pinned exactly where it belonged, the small silver insignia most civilians never recognized.

Flight surgeon wings.

They were not flashy.

They were not large.

They did not announce themselves across a room the way my father liked titles to announce themselves.

That was part of why I wore them.

I had learned, over the years, that people reveal themselves most clearly when they believe they are looking down.

Inside, the clubhouse smelled like polished wood, expensive coffee, sunscreen, and money old enough to speak softly.

The lobby walls were paneled in dark wood.

Oil paintings of dead businessmen watched from gold frames.

Golf trophies glittered beneath chandeliers like religious objects.

Near the entrance, three framed photographs showed my father smiling at charity tournaments.

In one, he held a crystal plaque.

In another, he stood beside a hospital board member.

In the third, he had his hand on Nathan’s shoulder and the smile of a man displaying proof that his line would continue exactly the way he wanted.

Another frame showed my brother Nathan shaking hands with a senator.

I was not in any of them.

There had been a time when that absence would have found a soft place in me and pressed hard.

Not anymore.

Families do not always erase you with shouting.

Sometimes they erase you with seating charts, framed walls, introductions that leave out your real work, and a lifetime of making sure your chair is closest to the service cart.

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